WMLTblog — On Improving Your Pastor (written for church members)

More than that, you also know just what he needs to do to improve!
Should you tell him? How do you tell him? You want him to grow, of
course, so you go to him with your laundry list of complaints – concerns
you have, plus some you have “heard” from others.
Now pastors who are wise will listen to and benefit from constructive
criticism. But pastors are human, too, sinners just like you! When the
list of faults is long and the discussion becomes personal, it’s not
hard for the pastor (and his family!) to become more and more
discouraged.
I ask you now, who benefits from a discouraged pastor who’s “down in
the dumps?” No one! (And believe me, I’ve seen and talked with my share
of discouraged pastors.) But you still really would like your pastor to
grow and improve! What do you do?
Here are some questions you first need to ask yourself (actually,
this article is developed from a conversation I had along these lines
several years ago with my friend, Pastor Mark Willig of St. John
Lutheran Church in Chester, Illinois).
So you want to improve your pastor? Are you Lutheran? “Well, of
course I am!” you respond. Then you will remember that Lutherans believe
in the means of grace that God does His work of saving, forgiving,
encouraging, strengthening us in faith through His Word and
through Baptism and Holy Communion. That means when we speak God’s Word,
God Himself is speaking that Word through us to accomplish His
purposes.
Now here’s another question. Do the means of grace also work on
pastors? Does the Word of God work, is God also speaking, when someone
speaks that Word to a pastor? Yes, of course He is, right?
Perhaps you haven’t thought of it this way, but this is exactly what
pastors need! They need to hear the Word of God spoken to them!
If your pastor grows in faith, it will help him be a better pastor,
right? How do we grow in the faith? As Lutherans we know we use the
means of grace. So, how do you “improve” your pastor? You use the means
of grace on him. You can’t baptize him all over again, but you can use
the Word of God on him. In fact, the most important thing you can
do for your pastor is to speak the Word of God to him. Tell him of
Jesus Christ and His love for him. Tell him that Jesus died and rose
also for him. Demonstrate that Word of God to him by your words and
actions.
It happened to me one Lent about 20 years ago. We had come through
some minor difficulties in our parish (I don’t even remember what they
were) when some women of the parish, during Holy Week, took it on
themselves to send me a card, a flower, a word of encouragement from the
Word of God every day that week before Easter. God used them, spoke
through them, to “improve” their pastor. And I was truly strengthened
for the task of bringing the resurrection Gospel with renewed vigor that
year.
What I am advocating for you, the lay people reading this, is a
simple approach centered in the Word of God. We are Lutherans. We
believe God Himself speaks in His Word. So SPEAK that Word to one
another, and especially to your pastor.
What you will find is that you will not “improve” your pastor – we can’t do that ourselves anyway – but that God
will. He can and He does work through His Word. What does Jesus say
about your pastor? He’s forgiven, washed in Jesus’ blood, just like you
are. Through His Word, God fills him with the Spirit.
That’s why we want to make the center of our meetings, everything we
do, our very life together, the speaking of God’s Word to one another.
See each other through the eyes of Jesus, who loves each of us with an
everlasting love. God “improves” us by forgiving us, restoring us,
renewing us in Jesus Christ.
Just in case there are any pastors reading this, it works the other
way, too. So you want to “improve” (or grow!) your congregation? Are you
Lutheran? Yes? Bring the means of grace to them, over and over. Speak
the Word of God to them, day in and day out, the Word focused on Jesus.
Keep on speaking. It’s what you have been given to do, even when you are tired of it. Tell them what a blessing it is to serve them with the Gospel, how precious they are in God’s eyes.
God will work through His Word – He promised! – to accomplish His
purpose. May we in our parishes, pastor and people, live as St. Paul
describes the church in Thessalonica:

“We also thank God continually because, when you
received the Word of God, which you heard from us, you accepted it not
as the word of men, but as it actually is, the Word of God, which is at
work in you who believe” (1 Thessalonians 2:13).